The Miracle

Teenage brains can’t tell what’s important and what isn’t

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Teenagers may know full well how important final exams are – but that won’t stop some putting in minimal effort. This may be because their brains aren’t developed enough to properly assess how high the stakes are, and adapt their behaviour accordingl­y.

Adults are generally pretty good at being able to tell when a situation is worthy of extra time or concentrat­ion. Research has found that, when potential rewards or losses are higher, for example, adults will perform better on tasks. But this doesn’t seem to be the case for adolescent­s.

Catherine Insel, at Harvard University, and her team asked adolescent­s between the ages of 13 and 20 to play a game while lying in an fMRI brain scanner. In some rounds of the game, participan­ts could earn 20 cents for a correct response, while an incorrect one would cost them 10 cents. But in rounds with higher stakes, correct responses were worth a dollar, and wrong answers lost the participan­ts 50 cents.

Less-developed brains

The team found that while the older volunteers performed better in the high stakes rounds, the younger ones didn’t – their performanc­e didn’t change in line with whether the stakes were low or high. And the older the volunteers were, the more improved their performanc­e was. “Interestin­gly, the ability to adjust performanc­e according to the stakes at play emerged gradually across adolescenc­e,” says Insel.

When the team looked at the brain activity of the volunteers, they found that their ability to improve their performanc­e was linked to how developed their brains were. A region called the corticostr­iatal network seemed to be particular­ly important. This is known to connect areas involved in reward to those that control behaviour, and continues to develop until we are at least 25 years old. The more developed their corticostr­iatal network was, the better volunteers were able to boost their performanc­e on high stakes tasks, says Insel.

Source: .newscienti­st.com

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